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Sue at The Field Museum
All About Sue
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Who is Sue?
All About Sue
Sue's Vital Statistics
Sue's Significance
Sue's Discovery
The Dispute Over Sue
The Purchase of Sue
Sue's Connection
Timeline of Events
Preparation and Mounting
Sue's Skull
Fact, Theory, Speculation
The Science of Sue
Freaquently Asked Questions
Image Gallery
Just for Kids
Educator's Resources
Plannign Your Visit
Events and Programs
Sue Store
Traveling Sue
Dinos at the Field
Sue Quiz
Sue e-Cards
Sue Interactive
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Sue's Discovery

In the summer of 1990, Sue Hendrickson was working as a fossil hunter with a commercial fossil collecting team from the Black Hills Institute at a dig site near Faith, South Dakota. Early on the morning of August 12, the team discovered their truck had a flat tire. While most of the team went into town to get it fixed and to take a short break from the heat, Sue stayed behind to look for fossils.

She hiked over to some sandstone bluffs that had previously caught her attention. Within minutes she spotted some bone fragments on the ground. She scanned the cliffs above to find out where the fragments had fallen from and saw dinosaur bones – big ones. She climbed up the cliff for a better look at the bones, and saw they were huge. She thought she had found a T. rex, and when the team returned, they confirmed her find and promptly named it "Sue" in her honor.

(© Photos above provided courtesy of Black Hills Institute of Geological Research, Inc., Hill City, South Dakota. Photographer Peter Larson)

Whose land was Sue on? Continue >>








Who is Sue | All About Sue | Image Gallery | Just for Kids | Educators' Resources | Planning Your Visit |
Events and Programs | Sue Store | Traveling Sue | Dinos at the Field | Sue Quiz | Sue e-Cards | Sue Interactive


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